ISBN 9788175992993

ISBN-10

8175992999

Binding

Paper Back

Number of Pages

328 Pages

Language

(English)

Subject

Non Fiction

Huck is back . . . Taken for a son by Widow Douglas; struggling against the society and its attempts to 'sivilize' him. Escaping his alcoholic father by faking his death, we join him as he voyages down the Mississippi River seeking liberation. Finding his way to Jackson's island he meets Jim, Mrs. Watson's runaway slave. What happens as they team up, capture a raft, and encounter a seemingly haphazard array of people and situations? Immersed in deadly violence, finding tranquility only on the river with Jim, will Huckleberry Finn find the freedom and independence he is seeking? A direct sequel to The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, it traces Huck's moral development as he moves from having an unthinking acceptance of received knowledge and values to developing an independently achieved understanding of what is right. A scathing satire on entrenched attitudes, Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn defines the American Dream of young heroes. Sometimes ironic, sometimes mocking, sometimes boyish and exuberant, it is named among the Great American Novels. " "Samuel Langhorne Clemens, better known by his pen name Mark Twain, was born in Florida, Missouri, in 1835. Lauded as the 'greatest American humorist of his age' and called 'the father of American literature' by William Faulkner, Twain has authored 28 books and numerous sketches and short stories. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885) called the first great American novel by some, is a story of a boy's adventures in the Mississippi Valley. A work of immeasurable richness and complexity, it remains an incomparable adventure story and a classic of American humour, more than a century after its publication